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  1. Edith Mansford Fitzgerald (1877–1940) was a deaf American woman who invented a system for the deaf to learn proper placement of words in the construction of sentences. Her method, which was known as the ' Fitzgerald Key ,' was used to teach those with hearing disabilities in three-quarters of the schools in the United States.

  2. Edith Fitzgerald (1889-1968) was an American screenwriter and playwright active primarily during the 1930s. Biography. Born and raised in Burnside, Kentucky, Edith Pearl Fitzgerald was one of 12 children born to John Fitzgerald and Dora Roberts.

  3. Edith Mansford Fitzgerald (29 August 1877–26 June 1940), educator of the deaf, was born in Memphis, Tennessee. Her parents, Joseph P. Fitzgerald and Jennie Mansford Fitzgerald, died before she reached the age of two, and she lived with extended family thereafter.

  4. Edith Mansfield Fitzgerald (1877–1940) was a deaf American woman who invented a system for the deaf to learn proper placement of words in the construction of sentences.

  5. Mar 22, 2017 · Born hard of hearing in Memphis, TN, and slowly further deafened; started in regular schools, then graduated from the Illinois School for the Deaf and from Gallaudet College (1903). Taught at the Wisconsin, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Virginia Schools for the deaf, becoming principal of the latter.

  6. Edith Mansfield Fitzgerald (1877–1940) was a deaf American woman who invented a system for the deaf to learn proper placement of words in the construction of sentences. Her method, which was known as the 'Fitzgerald Key,' was used to teach those with hearing disabilities in three-quarters of the schools in the United States.

  7. quatuor-esca.com › enQuatuor esca

    Edith Fitzgerald is the quartet’smetronome”. Our venerable keeper of time. She holds the reigns, contains flights of exuberance or grants liberty and abandon as fits the moment.